The nature of lightning in Ether field
Back when I was active, the back of my house looked like an antenna farm with dipole and Yagi antennas. Ham radio operators, especially those with a lot of expensive equipment, often buy lightning arresters and surge protectors. Here's a secret about field theory and lightning: many people mistakenly believe that lightning is electricity, but it isn't. Lightning is actually a form of ultra-powerful electrostatics, not electricity.
Even the most diligent ham radio operators, who invest a lot of time and money into lightning protection, know that a single lightning strike can obliterate their equipment in an instant. It's been a running joke for decades that no matter how good your grounding is, including polyphase grounding with tons of copper, a strong lightning strike will still destroy expensive gear. This is especially true for broadcast radio stations, which are mandated by their insurance companies to have high-end lightning arresters and surge protectors.
The key word here is "surge." Electrical surges have a known frequency and amplitude, but dielectrics or electrostatics exist in counter-space and do not surge like a wave. When lightning hits an antenna or coaxial cable, it can send up a stepped leader or streamer, which means the positive leader can be captured in high-speed photography.
Because lightning is not electrical and doesn't surge, even the best lightning arresting equipment in the world can't protect your gear. That's why, when a lightning storm develops, you need to completely disconnect your equipment. Lightning or electrostatics being in counter-space means it doesn't surge, so the equipment designed to protect against surges can't react in time.
It's like putting on a bulletproof vest after you've already been shot. Imagine someone continuously shooting at you, and halfway through, you decide to put on your vest. This is similar to how expensive surge protectors are supposed to work against lightning. Lightning is not electrical; it is electrostatic and dielectric. It doesn't surge in the way electricity does, which is why even the priciest surge protectors often fail.
Broadcast TV stations and ham radio operators invest in costly polyphase units and surge protectors, believing they'll protect their equipment. But if they leave their gear hooked up during a storm, they often return to find it destroyed. These protectors aren't garbage; people simply misunderstand lightning. All the grounding in the world won't stop an electrostatic pulse because it exists in counter-space, destroying equipment in zero time—before any surge protection can even register the event.
This is the grand mystery: everyone thinks lightning is electricity, but it isn't. Electricity surges, has frequencies, and operates with known voltages and amperages. In contrast, electrostatics and lightning don't surge. The protection equipment cannot react in time because the destruction happens instantly. This concept is similar to scalar waves, which aren't measured in frequencies per second but volts per second. Tesla understood this well.
For ham radio operators, when a lightning storm starts, the best option is to unhook everything. The top-notch surge protectors won't work because lightning is dielectric, not electrical. It's incredibly powerful electrostatics.
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